New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 5, 1930, Page 22

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Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE 's Inopportune Entrance Leaves Madge Nonplussed and ‘Wondering Just How Much of Her Conversation with Phil Veritzen He Had Overheard. “Dicky” 1 was conscious that even "my startled pronunciation of my usband's name was banal and that <he would be justified in reading it aright as a subterfuge to gain time r my answer to the query he had -put immediately following Philip ~Veritzen's departyre from the hole “dining room. But for an instant I ‘could think of nothing to say I could only wonder how much he had heard of the colloquy between ‘my employer and myself on the sub- JJect of the flowers I meant to wear at Mary's party. “At your service.” My husband ‘bent from the waist in a meticulous bow. “And I'll assuage your evi- dently burning curiosity right now “How did I get inside this sanctuary vhich you evidently figured was Tlosed to intruders? I walked in Ahrough the street door, which evi- dently by some careless—even crim- inal—oversight. I grant you, was Jett unlocked. How long have I been standing behind you listening to the exchange of sweet nothings between You and that prize eld billy goat? Ah wouldn't you IRe to know that? d wonder it I'd better tell you or keep you guessing?" His voice was Jlight. mocking. but there ran through it & touch of the brutality which can be Dicky's when his jealous temper is aroused. It Wwas the goad I needed, however. Before his atrocious little speech I had been abashed, but after it 1 felt nothing but resentful While the old adage self up from the limbo wh proverbs lurk I managed a laugh as ligh airy as his own and faced hin mocking eyes. “You are laboring under error dearest.” I cooed. "I haven't the slightest curiosity how you got in here. There are several entrances— from the street, from the lobby, and from the rear—all of them unlocked as far as I know. And if you have- n't gleaned sufficient information concerning my behavior suppose you linger a minute or two and inter- view Mr. Seibel. who has only just| stepped out of the room. But I must! ask you to Be brief. I have to put these flowers in their proper places, and you know it fusses me terribl to have anyone around. I have just| managed to get rid of Mr. Veritzen, | who mistakenly thought that his| gift of flowfra entitled him to stay! GARRISON | around and help in their arrange- imem." I made my voice slightly de- risfve. “And—-" “You want me to vamoose, too, | even though——" He broke off abruptly, looking at me steadily as if he were trying t solve a puzzling problem. I gave him as intent a look for my chame- leon husband had made another| startling change at the end of my little speech. His voice was on long- er mocking. his anger appeared to have fled and thery was in his voice |a sort of disappointed hurt-little- boy tone that tugged at my heart- strings Striking While the Iron Is Hot For though I had told the truth to Philip Veritzen and to Dicky| when I said that it fussed me ter- ribly to have anyone around when| 1 was arranging flowers. I never had| voiced it to Dicky before being glad to smother my own nervousness and vield to my band's greater artis- tic staste upon the rare occasions when he showed an interest in the floral decorations for any home fes- tivity. With a sudden impluse I went up im and put my hand compelling- v upon his arm. we stop playing at cross I said softly “I didn't it when I said you would bother me when I was arranging flowers. Because you know when- ever I can get you to stand still long enough I am anxious to turn that job over to you. But you said 50, pretty atrocious things your- self, remember. I think we're quits, however. S0 won't vou take your coat off and get busy with these flowers?"” 1 made my voice and eyves as ap- ealing as possible, or, rather. I per- ted my real feelings to betray emselves. Dicky stared down et me for a long second. Then he gave 4 short little laugh “What do you think I came up here for, idiot?"” But his voice was tender. I hauled up another old adage from its lurking place, the one concerning the temperature of iron, and acted upon it. “There is something I must say to you.™ I told him, “and I have a few seconds’ breathing spell just now. Will you listen?" Dicky's face darkened. “Oh, I'll listen all right.” he told me, “but warn you {f it deals with your wearing that old buzzard's flowers tnight, everything's all off.” Continued Tomorrow.) Copyright, 1930, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. By Thornton W. Burgess All through life this fact you'll find, That anger to the truth is blind. —O0ld Mother Nature. Impy felit that he was quite estab- lished out in the Great World. He had & home, with a nice, comfortable bedroom, two storerooms and an en- trance that was so well hidden that it was really a secret. Best of all, he had made that home all himself. It represented a lot of work — of hard work. Impy was proud of it It was his first home; that is, the first home of his own, and it was a very nice home, Impy sat on a fence post very early one morning. He had had his breakfast and he was sitting up on that fence post to take a sunbath and look around him. Something | moving back of the second post be- yond him caught his attention. At least, he thought he saw something moving there. He fixed his bright eyes on the top of that post For a few moments he saw nothing. Then he gaw a little nose ap the top of the post, followed b top of a head and a pair of t eyes that looked over at him shyly It was only for a minute and then Impy knew that other Chipmunk. Right away he be- came angry. This was his territory. He was ready to Chipmunk for it barked. “I kn ing. You'd bette you came. I sorry. Il m was boasting Nothing ha that other post waited. He saw no peering over the Finally he could s He jumped do: raced along it jumped up on t on top of th along tais 1o post behind w one was hiding. down from the one v to t way, he lo began to seen any one ght of a ta another post From thg way appeared running. boasted Ir here and r comes back I'll teac Tll teach him a forget.” Impy sat the post and this stranger to h He tried to brave. Ho didr and he said so there for a long tin more of the strar When Impy finally home he was very well sat himself. He felt that he that stra that thi ritory and i However, when Impy » He disappeared under some ferns some distance away. home he took extra care that no one should see just where he went. He didn't approach his home openly. He disappeared under some ferns | some distance away. If you had hing vou might have seen | a fern here and there move, but that | is all you would have seen. Your s would have to be very sharp to much. And so Impy hole and went down into his house underground. So it was| that he didn't see the prettiest of little Chipmunks shyly looking over toward those ferns where he had dis- appeared. 1 wonder t he would have said had he seen that pretty | little Chipmunk (Copyright, 1930, T. W. Burgess) | The r “Bashful Miss | | vz, Alexander George © FOR SUNDAY DiNNER and Frisco sa owned potatoes, corn on the cob, supreme salad ple cake, coffee Frizco Sauce poons chopped green cup diced celery 2 tablespoo! dry mustard 1 cup water drippi; frying pan| onions, peppers and celery. | Add flour to br a other in- 4 cook minute, stir tly peppers 2 tablespoons | 1-4 tea- 1-4 teaspoon | 1dd d Supreme | flavored ¥elatin ips bofling water, anned pineappl: hite cherries, cup diced almonds, 1-2 boiling 1 cup seeded diced pine » salad dress Pour bo pineapple xture and stir | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1930. Once Qvers B0 g EASas Mrs. Nouveau: “I adore solitary diamonds. four of them.” By C. D. Batchelor Reglatered U. 8. Patent Office I wanta get a ring with HORIZONTAL 1 Hurried. 5 Suitable. 8.To throw. 12 Cavit: 13 Shelter. 14 True olive. 15 Narrative poem 16 Native metal. 17 Tidy. 18 Purifies. 21 Decending. 24 To snuffle 28 To take a child for o 29 To love. 30 More osseous. 32 Simmered. 33 Decorator. 35 Liquid rock. 38 Female deer. 39 To instigate. 43 To leave out. 44 Measure. 45 Net weight of container 46 Domesticatad. 47 To soak flax. | 48 Brim VERTICAL 1 Pronoun. 2 Sound of a shot 3 Prophet 4 To crackle. 5 On high. 6 Fairy. 7 Years between 12 and 20, 8 Thoughtful. 9 Beer. 5 Wine vessel 1 Unit of work even if he bumps himself now and |then and gets frightfully dirty in |the process. To see the room from different angles, to learn through his mus- cles distances gnd heights, to dis. cover with mouth and finger tips |hardness and softness, heat and |cold—thege are intensely exeiting and illuminating experiences to the {little mind which is trying gradual- |1y to picce together out of sensation |and experience trustworthy infor- mation about the world in which he finds himself. Baby's playthings should include not only pretty, soft animals, and gay light rattles. He also should have such informal toys as kitchen utensils, clothes pins, raw vege. tables, pleces of hard, stiff paper, a | metal cup and a spoon to bang It with—anything, in fact, which will provide him with a variety of sense lexperience. diny of Mediina POSITION OF SLEEP “What side is the best to slecp on?" is a question the physician is frequently asked ! People have the impression that |one position is better than another, and that some postures are to be avoided. The most universally objected-to position is on the left side. You will be told that it intérferes With the circulation of the blood |and the free action of the heart. Or |again, you will be told that this position places a strain. on the stomach, and brings about a con- sestion of the left half of the brain. A search through medical litera- ture shows, however, that there are as many opponents to one, as to any other sleeping posture, and that: in fact, relatively convincing nature is known on the o-called normal, or best, posture. Recently, however, an interesting contribution to this matter was re ported in the Journal of the Ameri can Medical A ation ‘by John- son, Swan and Weigand. To make lace. To come in Growing out. Vehicle. Bustle. To put on Promise. Before. Guided. Jock:y. To scority. Pigmentary spo Quantity. Vigor. Evil Golf device. until dissolved thicken a little. Fold gredients and pour in mold until stiff and serve on lettuce. with more salad dre: Peach Ice 1 quagt thin cream 1 tablespoon vanilla Mix ingredients lized, chilled crank until mi froz Add Peach Mixture. Peach Mixture 2 cups peac 1 cup sugar Crush peach and Add to cream until stift. am and ste: freezer. J Maple Frosting For White Cake cup maple brown sugar, 2 2-3 cup milk Mix sugars, water and milk slowly, stirring frequently, 1 ball forms when port in cold water. Remove stove and let stand 20 vanilla and beat until creamy ¢ Pecans or Engli can be added to this frosting, sired sugar, 1 cup | _T.eo De Korn of New York walked 7 miles while pla 8olf in 15 hours, Cool and allow to | in other in- | &g, Parents 1 cup sugar, | pour into | re becomes haif| Mothers are apt to think of their | babies as delightful | they need |and 1o add sugar. | mixture and free: Baby's body is beautifully cared | Ifor. but his education in this day of | highly sanitary | brothers tremely neglected | To be sure, he is plaved with not too much, for the voung mother | has him tested | possible harm that do very tablespoons butte, 1 teaspoon vanilla t once from nutes. Add fashioned sight competent little rascal Baby should be allowed to touch and that will not hurt him ving 200 holes of | he is able to crawl, t ‘pcrn\med to drag himse walnuts if do- These scientists studied the vari- |ous postures which normal persons |take during normal sleep. | Bv using motion-pictures, elec- trical timing-clocks, ete., they werc Lable to secure a record of the differ- |ent positions assumed and of the |time duration during which thess | postures were held | The conclusions drawn are that |the healthy sleeper does not prefer any one position to the exclusion of toys to whom |11 the others. give only physical carc,| ON the contrary, the healthy 10 their heart's content. |S1€€Per. in the course of & typical AeiTEaearle | night of eight hours. BABY'S EDUCATION By Alice Judson Peale " lone position to another from 20 to nurseries and fev | 40 times. ' sisters often is ex.| TNe larger number of positions 5 el | are maintained for but a few min- |utes, and the average sleeper holds |no more than one posture for un {hour at a time, warned asainst spoiling | He is so well protected from | is allowed to e exploring grubby cley and but been SWEETEN SWEET CORN Sweet corn will he much more appetizing if a little suzar is plac- cd in the while it is cook- ing. little of that f h made the baby o family such to behold and such a water SICK ROOM HINT rything A deep medicine spoon. which As soon us |is rked like a measuring spoon should be|to designate the desired dose, avoids about'the danger of spilling the liquid. smell and handle eve little of a | changes from | BY ROSETTE Paris. Sept. 5—Let every woman Wwho rejoices in her short evening wrap enjoy it to the full during the rest of the summer. with the new longer lengths for fall. The hip-length évening coat, whether made of sheer velvet, lame, taffetas or glimmering satin, was undoubtedly the only solution for summer wear with the ankle- long evening dress and even with the train. It was becoming to every type of figure, provided the proper proportions were observed, and afforded all the protection de- manded of a summer wrap. ,But it is obvious that sthis could only be a passing fashion—the extra length of skirt would never as- sure sufficient warmth to the wear- er during the winter months, and already the mid-summer collections of tht leading style creators here prepared us for a new length in evening coats. One of the first innovators was undoubtedly Jean Patou. Although his spring and mid-season collec- tions featured the short wrap, with his ultra-formal evening gowns he showed long and even-trained wraps hemmed with luxurious furs. Worth and Jane Regny were also inspired in the same manner and some of these long coats can already be seen at brilliant functions worn by wom- en who are acknowledged leaders of fashions. Heavy fur trimming, chiefly foxes of every description, because of their decorative value, will be a feature of the new coats, and velvet un- doubtedly will be the favored me. dium. Sleeves both long and wide and tight-fitting, glove sleeves, the former hemmed with fur and the latter trimmed with fur mid-arm, will be worn. All sorts of new ideas will be offered so far as collars ar copcerned. The deep Medici shape is coming in again, and another fashion, shown by Jane Regny, con- sists in placing two fox skins on either shoulder to form important “epaulettes.” This strikes a very new note in collar styles. The redingote, or slightly form- fitting coat, is also shown both for day and evening wear. The new models seen in Paris at the moment have a slightly flaring hemlina, shorter at the front than at the back, while one particular wrap was Its reign ends| Paris Predicts Retum Of Longer Evening Wrap ming. scarcely longer than a walstcoat at the front and reaching way down to the hem of the skirt at the back. Ermine, as a trimming, is going to be given a rest this winter after The longer evening wrap is smartest for fall fashion experts are to be believed. Martial and Armand is made of chiffon velvet in the new shade of turquofse blue and is sumptuously trimmed Short pile velvet in a medium weight is u: elegant fall evening coat, on which he has placed a black lynx trime 3 and winter, if Paris Left: An advange model from dth_ blue fox. Right: by? Jean Patou in an a season of unparalleled success, but whatever cut a winter wrap adopts, it invariably will have to be heavily trimmed with fur to be really smart. S The sketches, rushed to the Her. ald from the Paris Bureau of NEA from actual models exhibited at the fall openings of the French capi- tal's famous fashion houses. Left: Perfection of line is the keynote of this Redfern evening gown of rose pink satin in the new season’s mode. The scarf finish to the decollete is becoming and the cut-out effects are novel. A small, jeweled ornament alone lends the necessary formal touch to the toi- lette. Center: This evening ensemble shows an original interpretation of the fall and winter mode. The er- mine-bordered peplum attached to the black velvet dress is wide enough to stand out from the fig- ure. The dress is form-fitted to the | knees, where it flares out according to the latest style dictates. The | samsscind. HAVE YO HEARD? Especially practical for fall and winter is a new ventilator that will cut out rain and snow, and abolish drafts at the same time that it per- mits a steady stream of fresh air to enter the room. When not in |use the screen rolls up and van- |ishes. Ventilators come in white, jvory, green, mahogany and blue. screens of pre-shrunk linen are also available. | Reflll | | bolero also is of ermine, with [Medici collar so high as almest to . Right: The fur-hemmed cape, a,fern model are distinctively A First-Hand Glimpse Of Pans Fall F ashic;; ' new, | The material is a black and white Service, are the first to be madeihide the wearer's head at the back. [tweed with the design horizontal, the incrustations the pockets, The which allows for at the back of shawl collar and belt of this Red»‘trimming is seal tur. STUNNING NEW FALL MODEL Pattern 2012 New Britain Herald 15c Practical Pattern By ANNE ADAMS Simple of detail, yet extremely smart of line. this attractive frock for the first coatless Fall days. The [higher waistline is very becoming !beuuse of the cleverly styled skirt yoke and slight bodice fullness. The upward points meeting the lace col- lar, effect slender lines of chic. The sleeve is new and charming. The skirt is gracefully flared and just the proper lemgth, about eight inches from the floor. Pattern 2012 fashions beautifully of flat or eanton crepe, dull satin, georgette, marocain or*chiffon vel- vet. In black, brown, green or navy a bit of ecru or rose lace would be Tovely. \ May be obtained only in sizes 16, 18, 20, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 18 requires 4 3-3 vards of 39-inch material. No dressmaking experience is necessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, eéxact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins carefully wrapped or stamps, for each pattern. Write plainly your |name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHION BOOK, containing ex- | quisite models for adults and ehil- dren and an excellent assortment of transfer patterns and stamped nov- elties, is NOW READY. Price FIF- TEEN CENTS. Book with pattern, 25 cents. Address all mail and or- ders to New Britain Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City.

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